A Mentor Challenged Bright Math Students And Changed Their LivesA biologist at Harvard was chatting with a colleague about a mentor who pushed him to do harder math problems. It turns out the colleague had the same mentor — and so did many others.

George Berzsenyi mentored thousands of high school students in mathematics.
Sara Stathas for NPR
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George Berzsenyi mentored thousands of high school students in mathematics.

Sara Stathas for NPR

George Berzsenyi is a retired math professor living in Milwaukee County. Most people have never heard of him.

But Berzsenyi has had a remarkable impact on American science and mathematics. He has mentored thousands of high school students, including some who became among the best mathematicians and scientists in the country.

I learned about Berzsenyi from a chance conversation with a scientist named Vamsi Mootha.

In the late 1980s, when Mootha was in high school in Beaumont, Texas, he won a science fair. A few days later, a letter arrived in the mail.

"But then when I started reading the next paragraph, I felt a sinking feeling in my stomach," Mootha says.

The letter went on to say that the math problem young Vamsi solved to win the fair had been solved hundreds of years earlier.

"Of course, the letter went on, 'You can't be expected to know this because you're only a sophomore in high school, and perhaps you haven't had the appropriate mentorship ... If you're interested in solving original problems, why don't you write back to me.' "

The letter was signed "George Berzsenyi." At the time, Berzsenyi was a math professor at Lamar University in Beaumont.

Mootha says the letter upset him because he thought he had discovered something new.

But then he became intrigued. "I said, 'You know what, I'm going to take him up on his offer and write back to him.' "

They got together and the older mathematician and the young prodigy hit it off. Berzsenyi would give Mootha those original problems to solve ... and an appreciation for mathematics.

"He also sort of instilled in me a love for mathematics and a love for sort of elegant mathematics that makes sense," Mootha says

Berzsenyi's influence on young math minds was far-reaching. In the 1980s, he (center) worked with a group of Australian students who were preparing for the International Mathematical Olympiad in 1984.
Courtesy of George Berzsenyi
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Berzsenyi's influence on young math minds was far-reaching. In the 1980s, he (center) worked with a group of Australian students who were preparing for the International Mathematical Olympiad in 1984.

Courtesy of George Berzsenyi

Eventually Mootha headed off to Stanford University, then Harvard medical school where he works today.

A half-dozen or so years ago, Mootha found out he had a lot of company in being mentored by George Berzsenyi.

"I share an office with somebody named Joel Hirschhorn," Mootha tells me. Hirschhorn is a geneticist at Harvard and the Broad Institute. Mootha and Hirschhorn were trying to solve a math problem related to their work.

"Joel is up at the board, he's drawing out some equations," Mootha recalls. "After we worked on the problem, we're just reminiscing about our high school days in mathematics.

"So I start to tell Joel about how I got this letter after winning a science fair," Mootha says, "and before I could actually finish that sentence, he actually asked me, 'Wait. Did that letter come from somebody named George Berzsenyi?' And I said, 'Yes, how do you know?' And he said, 'I used to communicate with George Berzsenyi also.' "

Hirschhorn would send in solutions to problems in a math newsletter Berzsenyi edited.

Berzsenyi still keeps a trove of student work in his archives, including a problem proposed in the October 1980 issue of the Mathematics Student with Joel Hirschhorn's answer.
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Berzsenyi still keeps a trove of student work in his archives, including a problem proposed in the October 1980 issue of the Mathematics Student with Joel Hirschhorn's answer.

Sara Stathas for NPR

The coincidence was astonishing, and then it happened again.

Two weeks later, Mootha is telling Sebastian Seung this story. Seung is a neuroscientist who at the time was at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Before he can finish the story, Mootha says, "Sebastian interrupts me and says, 'Wait, was that George Berzsenyi?' and I said, 'Yes, how do you know?' "

Mootha soon found that Berzsenyi has affected the lives of many top scientists and mathematicians.

At this point, I knew I had to meet Berzsenyi. So I went to meet him at his house in Milwaukee County where he lives with his wife, Kay.

Berzsenyi is 80 now. He was born in Hungary. In high school, he fell in love with mathematics. Hungary punches above its weight in the subject. The country has produced many famous mathematicians.

Berzsenyi came to America and got a doctorate in mathematics.

He joined the math faculty at Lamar in Beaumont, where he started mentoring talented high school math students.

He created a math magazine patterned on KöMaL, which he had read in Hungary while in high school. The magazine only existed for a few years. He's hoping someday someone will revive it.

There were tricky math problems in the magazine. When students sent in solutions, he would send back comments.

He was surprised how willing the students were to work with him. He realized he was filling an unmet need. Berzsenyi said most high schools don't have the expertise to help these bright math students, and professional mathematicians by and large can't be bothered.

Berzsenyi took a busload of students, including Jimmy Wilson and Ferrell Wheeler, to the American Regions Mathematics League in Texas in 1981 and 1982.
Courtesy of George Berzsenyi
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Courtesy of George Berzsenyi

Berzsenyi took a busload of students, including Jimmy Wilson and Ferrell Wheeler, to the American Regions Mathematics League in Texas in 1981 and 1982.

Courtesy of George Berzsenyi

"In spite of their youth, I considered them mathematically supremely mature and treated them in such fashion ... I really admired them," he says.

Over the years, Berzsenyi worked with thousands of kids. He didn't expect all of them to become mathematicians. In addition to math, Berzsenyi's protégés have gone on to biology, business and even law.

"I first met Dr. Berzsenyi through the young scholars programs in 1995," says Yvonne Lai, an assistant math professor the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. She says Berzsenyi created the program as kind of a summer math camp for high school students.

As the camp was coming to an end, Lai recalls, "He assigned us a group of 10 math competition-style problems that we could hand in as a final assignment in 10 years."

The group stayed in touch using a mailing list. And about a decade later, "somebody wrote the mailing list and said, 'It's been 10 years, we have a problem set due,' " Lai says with a laugh.

An assignment due 10 years later is just the kind of clever idea George Berzsenyi used to keep students engaged in math.

Berzsenyi is proud of what his math protégés have accomplished. Ferrell Wheeler does cryptography work for the National Security Agency. Kiran Kedlaya works on number theory at the University of California, San Diego. Noam Elkies became a tenured math faculty member at Harvard when he was just 26 years old.

The protégés are uniformly grateful for Berzsenyi's attention.

It is "through programs that George Berzsenyi developed that I think I got the courage to become a math major," says Lai.

"His influence on me is hard to describe," says Wheeler. "He was like a second father to me. And he helped me immensely."

"It's hard to find somebody who is that passionate about discovering the future generation of talent in any field, but particularly in mathematics," says Kedlaya.

Of all the students Berzsenyi told me about in the hours we spoke, one stood out: Jimmy Wilson. "In the long run, Jimmy was probably my major discovery," Berzsenyi says.

Wilson almost fell through the cracks. When he was a high school freshman, Wilson took part in a math competition. Berzsenyi happened to look over the shoulder of the judge scoring Wilson's solution to one of the tough problems in the competition.

"The solution he gave to the problem was a perfect solution," Berzsenyi says. "Somehow, the person who was grading the solution didn't recognize that it actually solved the problem, and very elegantly."

Jimmy Wilson chats with mathematician Nura Turner at the United States of America Mathematical Olympiad in 1978.
Courtesy of George Berzsenyi
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Courtesy of George Berzsenyi

Jimmy Wilson chats with mathematician Nura Turner at the United States of America Mathematical Olympiad in 1978.

Courtesy of George Berzsenyi

Later in high school, Berzseny took Wilson and a bunch of other students to a math competition on the East Coast.

The concluding event at the competition was a game called Buzz.

"The kid never heard of this before. I never heard of it before," Berzsenyi says.

It's a counting game. Students stand in a circle and take turns counting, but there are complex rules where you replace numbers with words like "buzz," "bang" or "whack." Say the wrong word and you're out. It's fiendishly hard to keep all the rules straight, especially as the count reaches into the hundreds.

Eventually, there were just two students left: the previous year's champion and Wilson.

"It was just unbelievable to watch," Berzsenyi recalls. "Very methodically, Jimmy just succeeded where the other kid didn't."

Wheeler still owns the Hungarian Rubik's Cube that Berzsenyi gave him. Berzsenyi also gave one to Jimmy Wilson.
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Wheeler still owns the Hungarian Rubik's Cube that Berzsenyi gave him. Berzsenyi also gave one to Jimmy Wilson.

Meredith Rizzo/NPR

For all his natural aptitude for math, at first Wilson didn't do well in college. He dropped out of Texas A&M. Berzsenyi says it was because Wilson hadn't really learned how to study.

"At that time, I didn't recognize some of the things I should have been doing," he says. "I still feel bad about it."

"I don't think he needs to feel that way at all," says Jimmy Wilson. Today he goes by Jim Wilson. He now has his college degree. He still lives in Beaumont, Texas. He has worked as an educator in the local school system for most of his adult life.

He's proud of what he did at that East Coast math competition, proud of his math skills. He's especially proud of the day George Berzsenyi gave him a Rubik's Cube.

Wilson recalled Berzsenyi telling him how impressed he was: " 'Oh, by the way, I think you're the first person in the country to solve it.' " The cube Berzsenyi gave Wilson was one he had brought back from Hungary, where the Rubik's Cube was invented. The U.S. version had yet to go on the market — it did so in 1980.

It's true Wilson didn't achieve the kind of academic fame or financial success that some of Berzsenyi's other students did.

"I could look back with some regrets," Wilson says. But he has also found great fulfillment in helping the students he has taught over the years to find the joy in math.

"To this day, as I reach out to help students to improve their skills, it's because of that relationship that started when I was in high school with Dr. Berzsenyi," Wilson says.